Your selection in monuments gave 176 results.
A limestone lion holding a flowing urn, discovered at the entrance of the Mithraeum of Les Bolards, reflects the ritual significance of water within the cult of Mithras.
The sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull found in Dormagen is exposed at Bonn Landesmuseum.
Statue in yellow sandstone found in the pit of the Mithraeum of Dieburg, showing Mithras standing beside an altar with bow and arrow, accompanied by a vase and associated with the water miracle.
The sculpture of the birth of Mithras in Florence included the head of Oceanus.
Sandstone statue of Cautopates holding two downward-pointing torches, from the Ober-Florstadt Mithraeum.
This bust of a lion-headed figure has been was part of a French private collection.
Roman relief from a sanctuary on the Janiculum Hill (Rome), showing a male figure bound by a serpent coiled seven times.
Conglomerate statue of the birth of Mithras, found in a burnt layer, showing the god nude emerging from the rock with raised hands and a snake.
Statue of Cautes from Bodobrica, discovered around 1940, depicting the torchbearer standing before a tree or rock and associated with a bucranium.
Head, possibly of Mithras, wearing a Phrygian cap, found in the bed of the Millicri River, near Locri, Calabria.
Mithras being born from the rock (petrogenia), acquired in Rome and formerly kept in Berlin.
Standing stone statuette of Cautopates, the downward-torch bearer, found at Bordeaux and kept in the city’s museum of antiquities (musée d’Aquitaine ?).
Small marble head probably of Mithras tauroctonus from Leptis Magna, now Khoms.
Statue of a standing person in eastern attire in red, local limestone with inscription.
White marble statue of Lion-head god of time, formerly in the Villa Albani, nowadays in the Musei Vaticani.
The marble Aion from the lost Mithraeum Fagan, Ostia, now presides the entrance to the Vatican Library.
This sculpture of Mithras killing the bull was dedicated to the ’incomprehensible god’ by a certain priest called Gaius Valerius Heracles.
The Stockstadt Raven is one of only two standing-alone sculptures of this bird to be found in Mithraic statuary.
Marble torso found at Ostia in 1912 between the Decumanus and the Via dei Molini, dedicated to Mithras by a certain Atilius Glycol.